Iran internet blackout has lasted two weeks: monitor
Asia
By
AFP
| Jan 22, 2026
The nationwide shutdown of the internet by authorities in Iran, which activists fear is aimed at masking the true scale of a crackdown on protests, has lasted more than two weeks, a monitor said Thursday.
"Iran has now been under a national internet blackout for two full weeks," said Netblocks in a post on X.
In recent days, there have been reports of more users being able to gain access to the internet on occasional moments, but the monitor indicated this was sporadic and limited to government-approved sites and traffic.
"At hour 336, connectivity levels continue to flatline with only a slight rise at the backbone supplying regime-whitelisted networks," it said.
"A few users are now able to tunnel to the outside world," it added, without specifying the tools used for this.
READ MORE
Of demand and supply: Why affordable housing uptake has slowed down
New policy fails to deliver tax predictability, expand tax base
Why investing in real estate over paper wealth makes sense
New solutions seal energy access gaps for homes
State rallies support for Sacco reforms
Jubilee asset management records surge in profitability
EU unblocks 90-bn-euro Ukraine loan after Hungary row
Kisumu port targets 700,000 tonnes as expansion fuels Lake Victoria trade boom
Revealed: Delayed wages push salaried Kenyans to survive on advance loans
Giving their first official toll from the protests, Iranian authorities on Wednesday said 3,117 people were killed during the wave of demonstrations.
The statement from Iran's foundation for martyrs and veterans sought to distinguish "martyrs", who it said were members of security forces or innocent bystanders, and what it described as "rioters" backed by the US.
Of its toll of 3,117, it said 2,427 people were "martyrs".
However, rights groups say the heavy toll was caused by security forces firing directly on protesters and that the actual number of those killed could be far higher and even extend to over 20,000.
Rights groups have complained that the internet shutdown has deliberately impeded their work and masked the scale of the crackdown.
The shutdown began on the evening of January 8 when mass protests erupted in several major cities, openly challenging the clerical authorities.